Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
321939 European Neuropsychopharmacology 2009 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

Phencyclidine (PCP) produces cognitive deficits of relevance to schizophrenia in animal models. The aim was to investigate the efficacy of the D1-like receptor agonist, SKF-38393, to improve PCP-induced deficits in the novel object recognition (NOR) and operant reversal learning (RL) tasks. Rats received either sub-chronic PCP (2 mg/kg) or vehicle for 7 days, followed by a 7-day washout. Rats were either tested in NOR or the RL tasks. In NOR, vehicle rats successfully discriminated between novel and familiar objects, an effect abolished in PCP-treated rats. SKF-38393 (6 mg/kg) significantly ameliorated the PCP-induced deficit (P < 0.01) an effect significantly antagonised by SCH-23390 (0.05 mg/kg), a D1-like receptor antagonist (P < 0.01). In the RL task sub-chronic PCP significantly reduced performance in the reversal phase (P < 0.001); SKF-38393 (6.0 mg/kg) improved this PCP-induced deficit, an effect antagonised by SCH-23390 (P < 0.05). These results suggest a role for D1-like receptors in improvement of cognitive function in paradigms of relevance to schizophrenia.

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